data recovery!!!!

  • Thread starter Thread starter manish
  • Start date Start date
M

manish

hi

we have windows 2000 Advance server in our office, i just
upgraded the disk to basic to dynamic disk , after the
restart , i lost my D drive , it is showing it as RAW
partition , previously it was FAT 32 , but my other 2
drives are funcitoning properly (they both were NTFS), i
have lot of important Data in D drive , is there any way i
can recover all that data with out losing any of it.

any help in this regard will be greatly appreciated.

thanz in advance

regards
manish
 
hi

we have windows 2000 Advance server in our office, i just
upgraded the disk to basic to dynamic disk , after the
restart , i lost my D drive , it is showing it as RAW
partition , previously it was FAT 32 , but my other 2
drives are funcitoning properly (they both were NTFS), i
have lot of important Data in D drive , is there any way i
can recover all that data with out losing any of it.

any help in this regard will be greatly appreciated.

thanz in advance

regards
manish

There are companies that make a living doing that. Find one in the Yellow pages.

If the data was really important, why didn't you have a backup?


Jerold Schulman
Windows: General MVP
JSI, Inc.
http://www.jsiinc.com
 
manish said:
hi

we have windows 2000 Advance server in our office, i just
upgraded the disk to basic to dynamic disk , after the
restart , i lost my D drive , it is showing it as RAW
partition , previously it was FAT 32 , but my other 2
drives are funcitoning properly (they both were NTFS), i
have lot of important Data in D drive , is there any way i
can recover all that data with out losing any of it.

any help in this regard will be greatly appreciated.

thanz in advance

regards
manish

You can download a free copy of ptedit.exe from the
PQMagic site, then use it to edit the partition table
and set the type of the missing partition to 0B (FAT32)
or 0C (FAT32X). If successful you would have to back
up the whole drive, then repartition it.

Your accident proves once more that there are two
classes of people: Those who back up important data
every day or every week, and those who do not do it
just yet. The transition from one group to the other
can be very painful.
 
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